In the hope that the seasonal spirit will prevail, East Timor's Truth
and Reconciliation Commission is asking former political leaders to seek
forgiveness for triggering the civil war that paved the way for
Indonesia's bloody 1975 invasion.

President Xanana Gusmao was the first witness to testify yesterday at
what will be a four-day hearing, saying: "Timor's political parties
owe an apology to our people for the suffering they imposed."

Political observers consider the hearings as timely, given fears that
East Timor may split into warring political factions when the UN withdraws
in May.

Mr Gusmao admitted his errors as a junior member of the nationalist
Fretilin party. He said that after Portugal's 1974 revolution granted
freedom to the East Timorese "our parties began dividing people in an
irrational way. Brothers and sisters turned against each other. We
slandered each other until we no longer knew what was true".

But he also pointed to external interests that fanned divisions and
limited the choices of Timor's immature politicians 30 years ago. Among
them were the Soeharto dictatorship's virulent anti-communism, the
Australian Government's refusal to help Portugal decolonise, and the
communist victory in Vietnam, which hardened American attitudes to leftist
governments in the region but inspired impressionable young Timorese.